How To Win Friends And Influence People

(Joyce) #1

him by name, and thanked him for coming to Washington. And there was
nothing perfunctory about his thanks. He meant what he said. I could feel that.
‘A few days after returning to New York, I got an autographed photograph of
President Roosevelt and a little note of thanks again expressing his appreciation
for my assistance. How he found time to do it is a mystery to me.’
Franklin D. Roosevelt knew that one of the simplest, most obvious and most
important ways of gaining good will was by remembering names and making
people feel important – yet how many of us do it?
Half the time we are introduced to a stranger, we chat a few minutes and
can’t even remember his or her name by the time we say goodbye.
One of the first lessons a politician learns is this: ‘To recall a voter’s name is
statesmanship. To forget it is oblivion.’
And the ability to remember names is almost as important in business and
social contacts as it is in politics.
Napoleon the Third, Emperor of France and nephew of the great Napoleon,
boasted that in spite of all his royal duties he could remember the name of every
person he met.
His technique? Simple. If he didn’t hear the name distinctly, he said, ‘So
sorry. I didn’t get the name clearly.’ Then, if it was an unusual name, he would
say, ‘How is it spelled?’
During the conversation, he took the trouble to repeat the name several
times, and tried to associate it in his mind with the person’s features, expression
and general appearance.
If the person was someone of importance, Napoleon went to even further
pains. As soon as His Royal Highness was alone, he wrote the name down on a
piece of paper, looked at it, concentrated on it, fixed it securely in his mind, and
then tore up the paper. In this way, he gained an eye impression of the name as
well as an ear impression.
All this takes time, but ‘Good manners,’ said Emerson, ‘are made up of petty
sacrifices.’
The importance of remembering and using names is not just the prerogative
of kings and corporate executives. It works for all of us. Ken Nottingham, an
employee of General Motors in Indiana, usually had lunch at the company
cafeteria. He noticed that the woman who worked behind the counter always had
a scowl on her face. ‘She had been making sandwiches for about two hours and I
was just another sandwich to her. I told her what I wanted. She weighed out the
ham on a little scale, then she gave me one leaf of lettuce, a few potato chips and

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